Monday, June 8, 2020

How To Turn Your Bedroom Into The Sanctuary You Need Right Now

Many of us are going into a third month of lockdown, spending more time than ever getting to know every inch of our homes. Subsequently, we’re becoming ever more sensitive to how important it is to feel good in them. According to a Harris Poll conducted on behalf of Marvin, 92% of Americans agree that it is important they feel happy in their home right now. Nearly half (46%) plan to do renovations or projects to feel happier about their home in the next three months. The room in which we spend nearly a third of our lives, the bedroom, might be the most impactful place to start. Here are some of the easiest ways to turn your bedroom into a sanctuary.

According to Sue Wadden, Director of Color Marketing at Sherwin Williams, "We spend about a third of our lives in our bedrooms. Your bedroom should be your sanctuary, a place you can retreat to after a long day. A warm brown like Poised Taupe SW 6039 envelops you and sets the mood for a satisfying slumber. You can create the ultimate "zen" bedroom by playing off of the earth tones in this color and add greenery and wood tones. For those that prefer a cooler tone for the bedroom, I really love the color Silvermist SW 7621. The color is a beautiful silvery green and harmonizes well with browns, greenery and wood tones. "The Mantra palette by Sherwin Williams, specifically, seems to be having a moment with its contemporary neutral tones. According to Wadden, "Mantra was inspired by the intersection between the East and West, particularly the ongoing desire for Scandinavian simplicity and elegantly efficient Japanese design. This palette features muted neutrals like Grayish SW 6001 and Software SW 7074 that effortlessly glide from warm to cool, embracing simplicity and versatility."

In terms of what to paint where, Wadden shares that, "Pure White SW7005 is always a great choice for a ceiling, but if you’d like a little bit of color above, Spatial White SW 6259 and Individual White SW 6008 are soft neutrals that, when used on a celling, would make the room seem lighter and airier."

Saturday, May 23, 2020

Meet The Startup Aiming To Solve Overtourism

GetYourGuide, an online travel company based in Berlin, is launching a new platform called “Beat the Crowds” — because crowds aren’t just an annoyance anymore, they’re a public health threat.

Like most online travel startups, GetYourGuide is still reeling from the impact of Covid-19. An aggregator of small travel businesses like museums, cultural attractions, and guided excursions, its value proposition is a curated selection of over 58,000 things to do in 150 countries, accessible via its website and mobile app. Founded in 2009, the Berlin-based unicorn with $650+ million in its coffers was built on the promise of globalization—until that promise was broken.

“It’s no secret. Revenues dropped 95%. We were selling north of 40 million experiences, and doing tens of thousands of bookings every day. Now it’s in the hundreds,” said GetYourGuide’s Chief Operating Officer Tao Tao on a recent Zoom call.

It’s not just Tao Tao. Almost every online travel company (OTA) is currently in survival mode. TripAdvisor, Klook, Expedia, and (in-person) Airbnb Experiences have all watched booking revenues fall off a cliff in March and April, as the pandemic closed international borders, grounded passenger jet planes, and shuttered accommodations around the world.

And yet, innovation persists. As a small, relatively nimble company, GetYourGuide engineers are working quickly to build new tech that can remain relevant in a post-covid world. Their goal is to combat the resurgence of overtourism by providing a solution called “Beat the Crowds.” If it works, the startup-that-could might just make a comeback.

Wednesday, April 22, 2020

Fashion Films As A Medium For Cultural Diplomacy

Film as a medium of diplomacy has historically transcended brewing conflicts and changing borders. The Academy Award for Best International Feature Film for the Soviet classic “Moscow Doesn’t Believe In Tears” was awarded in 1981 at the height of the Cold War and helped re-humanize the Soviet people in the eyes of a world caught amidst propaganda wars. Fashion has never been too far from the international relations scene as well. Much discussed images of First Lady of the United States Melania Trump still speak volumes to the political power of style. No wonder that fashion film as an emergent genre keeps true to its diplomatic mission roots.

From the open landscapes to the vacuum-tight spaces of memory, this fashion season was held during an unprecedented time, as a result of the coronavirus pandemic, yielding new, creative ways to showcase fashion. In Russia, designers and brands presented digital fashion films in lieu of the in-person runway shows. It was the premier online edition of the Mercedes Benz Fashion Week Russia F/W 2020. Socially distant, yet globally accessible!

In just under 30 minutes of total screening time, the 16 specially selected films below preserved the cultural zeitgeist, and provided a rare insight into the mindset of a current generation of Russian designers, performers and artists facing the ever-mounting pressures of contemporary politics, business and love. Life appears as an intoxicating exploration of styles in a form of cinematic spectacle that foregrounds costume, adornment, and visual mood as the all-six-senses vehicle for pleasure. Not to be missed!

Brudekjoler

Friday, March 20, 2020

How Can Fashion E-Commerce Be More Inclusive?


Fashion is making great strides toward inclusivity. As models of all sizes, ages and ethnicities walk down runways across the world, it’s more clear than ever that inclusivity and diversity aren't merely buzzwords -- they're the norm.

However, the same has not translated into e-commerce, which is surprising, given that retail is the natural extension of fashion. It is especially significant given that we live in this time of social media where consumers are more vocal and vigilant than ever before. Here are three ways in which retailers can enable inclusive experiences for their online customers.

Most female editorial models are 5 feet, 9 inches tall and quite slim, whereas the average American woman is about 5 feet, 4 inches tall and veers between size 16 and 18. When consumers are shopping online and see these tall and thin models, one of two things happens. They may shop aspirationally, which often leads to returns because of fit problems and costs e-commerce retailers a lot in return shipping and restocking. Or, the consumer refrains from making the purchase. Many times, had she seen the garment on a model of her size, she may have actually been convinced to buy it by the way it looked.

Size visualization is when the same garment can be displayed to shoppers across a number of different sizes, and if your e-commerce platform isn't practicing it, you should consider the impact it could have on your bottom line. Everlane, for example, shows garments in four sizes: 0, 2, 6 and 10. Universal Standard sells and photographs garments on models in sizes ranging from 0 to 40.

The Good American is another example of a brand that does size variation well and has a more diverse range of models too -- here, shoppers can see models of sizes 0, 8 and 16. It is worth mentioning that Khloe Kardashian, who is one of the co-founders of the brand, announced only this month that the brand was making more efforts to make its e-commerce experience more inclusive by casting real women across all sizes instead of models for its denim. Inclusivity has been the brand’s anchor from its inception, and it has firmly stuck behind it -- resulting in sales that crossed $1 million on its first day and making it the biggest denim launch in history.
 
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Tuesday, January 21, 2020

Milan's Best Trattorias Combine Personality With Panache

Owing to Milan's international character, finding all kinds of first-rate food from sushi to Indian dosas is certainly easier than in Rome or Florence, and in its number of Italian regional trattorias and ristoranti you'll find Milan dotted with entries from Sicily, Tuscany, Liguria, Abruzzo and, of course, its own region of Lombardy.

         Many have been in the city a long time, and the local favorites are certainly more interesting than the tourist-favored places within the Galleria. Since Milan is such a fashionable city, the concierges tend to steer foreign visitors to the most stylish and most expensive spots—some good, some merely expensive—like Pacifico, Niko Romito, Torre in the new Prada building, the Armani Ristorante and Dolce & Gabbana's Bar Martini.

         Good or not, those are decidedly not where the Milanesi eat regularly. Smaller trattorias are more their style and cheaper.

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